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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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WETA
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but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been pedridov y b the coca-cola company,y suorhiti tngs ogram t since 2002. and american expressm
but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been pedridov y b the coca-cola company,y suorhiti tngs ogram t since 2002. and american expressm
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been provided by the coca-cola company, supporting this program since 2002. and american express >> announcer: the following kqed production was produced in high definition. >> the beef torta was out of this world. >> i actually don't discriminate against pizza. >> this is a temple to red meat. >> we couldn't see it, and we couldn't hear it. >> right. >> whoa! i'm actually in san francisco? >> this is amazing! [ laughter ] bring me more.
but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been provided by the coca-cola company, supporting this program since 2002. and american express >> announcer: the following...
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Jan 25, 2013
01/13
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but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been provided by the coca-cola company, supporting this program since 2002. and american express captioning sponsored by wpbt >> this is n.b.r. >> susie: good evening everyone. i'm susie gharib. from windows 8 to the surface tablet, a lot was riding on microsoft's latest earnings, the software giant delivers, but just barely. >> tom: i'm tom hudson. investors take a $63 bite out of apple stock. chomping almost 12% off its price, thanks to the lack of blockbuster financial results. >> susie: and the former vice chairman of the federal reserve, talks with us about the debt crisis, the economy and the fed. alan blinder joins us. >> tom: that and more tonight on "n.b.r."! >> susie: just a single cent higher. earnings from software "giant" microsoft were only a penny mor
but we hope that with the elections and with the new administration or the re-election of president obama that this will provide some wind for our sails. >> rose: thank you for coming. great to see you. >> thank you. >> rose: great to see you against. >> thank you,. >> rose: thank you very much. >> funding for charlie rose has been provided by the coca-cola company, supporting this program since 2002. and american express captioning sponsored by wpbt >>...
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Jan 24, 2013
01/13
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KQED
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., before the election, was expecting would follow the election, would follow an obama victory. that hasn't happened. and so i think michael is rote that we're heading toward a period in which confrontation, even military confrontation, is possible. woe keep waiting for this diplomatic moment. certainly, senator kerry, if he becomes secretary of state, has been-- has been thinking about this for-- for years and i think that would be a at the very top of his agenda. how do you explore a way to negotiated conversation. the sphriens tehran, so far as we can read them, sanctions are tough, but they don't seem to be changing iranian behavior yet. >> rose: is that your assessment, michael, even though the sanctions have been effective to a degree, there have not been changed behavior and their timeexploin their timetable moves apace? >> yes, i basically agree with that. i think when the administration says the iran policy is effective what, they mean is they've lined up support for sanctions and they're hurting the iranian economy. but the-- unfortunately, the-- what hasn't yet happen
., before the election, was expecting would follow the election, would follow an obama victory. that hasn't happened. and so i think michael is rote that we're heading toward a period in which confrontation, even military confrontation, is possible. woe keep waiting for this diplomatic moment. certainly, senator kerry, if he becomes secretary of state, has been-- has been thinking about this for-- for years and i think that would be a at the very top of his agenda. how do you explore a way to...
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Jul 12, 2013
07/13
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KRCB
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you can sell pepsi the way you sold, you know, obama's re-election? >> you know, i think i absolutely think there are lessons that can be learned. i think there are two really significant takeaways that apply in almost every context, particularly in a context where a company is trying to market to individual people. you know, the first is as you mentioned, the data and targeting capabilities that any kind of constitution has are so much more sophisticated now than they were a year agoing five years ago, and less sophisticated now than a year from now and five years from now. every element of what we do as a campaign and now we're trying to help companies do the same thing, was informed by data. so you saw television ads that we bought bought on the basis of well a lot of people watch this show so let's advertise there. but on the basis of where are there actual concentrations of persuadable voters an how can we hit them in the most cost effective way. that informed how the president's time was scheduled. where we put resources into calling reporters i
you can sell pepsi the way you sold, you know, obama's re-election? >> you know, i think i absolutely think there are lessons that can be learned. i think there are two really significant takeaways that apply in almost every context, particularly in a context where a company is trying to market to individual people. you know, the first is as you mentioned, the data and targeting capabilities that any kind of constitution has are so much more sophisticated now than they were a year agoing...
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Mar 25, 2013
03/13
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in 2008, and barack obama was elected president. he come spodz office with what assumptions about iraq, and how did his views on iraq play out? >> well, president obama, as a candidate-- and i interviewed him twice on iraq, single subject, as a candidate-- his view was he campaigned on ae platform of taking all of the american combat brigades out inn 16 months with a date certain. >> rose: okay, then he gets into power, and he withdraws the troops. and then there are negotiations to leave some troops, which yous you believe was a significantwa mistake, that negotiation failed. and so they did not leave five, 000, or 10,000 troops there. 1 what happened? >> well, first off, withha president obama, he really did not fulfill his campaign promisf literally of taking the troops out in 16 months.s he pretted much ended up takingly them out on george bush's schedule, the end of 2011. two, the other thing is what people don't realize is the t obama administration tried to de a lot more than just take troops out. they tried to re-engineer th
in 2008, and barack obama was elected president. he come spodz office with what assumptions about iraq, and how did his views on iraq play out? >> well, president obama, as a candidate-- and i interviewed him twice on iraq, single subject, as a candidate-- his view was he campaigned on ae platform of taking all of the american combat brigades out inn 16 months with a date certain. >> rose: okay, then he gets into power, and he withdraws the troops. and then there are negotiations to...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Apr 30, 2013
04/13
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WHUT
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. >> actually, when president obama was elected the first time, during his first term, to the very first overseas trip he made was to turkey, because we have such a long list of upon agenda items when we look at the foreign policy subjects. >> rose: and what are they? >> oh, you name it. actually, when i first -- condi rice was my counterpart and then hillary clinton was my counterpart and then i asked them to list the top ten foreign policy issues of the u.s. and then i listed my top ten foreign policy issues. >> and? >> a they were almost 90 percent overlapping. >> rose: yes. >> and what is more, in most of those areas, u.s. and turkey have very similar targets or very similar intended out comes, sometimes we have our different views about how to reach the same targets so our way of reaching the same target differs but on the other hand, turkey and the u.s. are two countries which have a sense of global responsibility and also we share the same values and promote the very same values around the world, like democracy, like human rights, like freedom. >> rose: i want to talk about turkis
. >> actually, when president obama was elected the first time, during his first term, to the very first overseas trip he made was to turkey, because we have such a long list of upon agenda items when we look at the foreign policy subjects. >> rose: and what are they? >> oh, you name it. actually, when i first -- condi rice was my counterpart and then hillary clinton was my counterpart and then i asked them to list the top ten foreign policy issues of the u.s. and then i...
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Nov 28, 2013
11/13
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we'll see what happens in the midterm elections which may make it more difficult. if health care is a dominant issue, he could be looking at a republican senate and house. >> and then he's a lame duck. >> rose: if he's not already. what's at issue now is credibility. and that's worst thing you could lose. >> exactly. >> rose: who would you-- if you were given the great upon option of choosing the next president -- it's not anything to be an looks charles krauthammer has been give wine god, whoever chooses to make the choice, who would you choose? who would be good? >> let me just say-- i'll say it right here-- if nominated i will not run. but if elected, charlie, i will serve. i'm just lazy. i don't want to go to the iowa state fair. >> rose: ho would you choose a scientist? would you choose a politician. would you choose a governor. would you choose someone who is the brightest person you've ever encountered? who would you choose? >> i would put it in these terms. this is a center-right country. i think that's what it is intrinsically. i think if you find someone
we'll see what happens in the midterm elections which may make it more difficult. if health care is a dominant issue, he could be looking at a republican senate and house. >> and then he's a lame duck. >> rose: if he's not already. what's at issue now is credibility. and that's worst thing you could lose. >> exactly. >> rose: who would you-- if you were given the great upon option of choosing the next president -- it's not anything to be an looks charles krauthammer has...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 1, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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he was elected democratically. he governed exclusively. president obama. >> rose: constitutionally. >> no, exclusively. >> rose: i was asking. >> he actually -- have a constitution. and then he developed one only among islamists. >> rose: rights. >> well, that left me out. i'm a practice muslim. they left me out. i cond find my identity in that. even president obama who was a foreigner, an american, a foreigner, in his speech, he mentioned that the egyptian people asked the president to leave who was elected democratically because they felt that he was not governing inclusively. >> rose: here's what said. >> over the last few years particularly in he gipts we have sown just how hard this transition will be. mohammed morsi democratically elected but proving unwilling or unable to govern in a way that was fully inclusive. >> exactly. >> rose: the interim government that replaced him responded to the desire of millions of egyptians who believed the revolution had taken a wrong turn but it too had made decisions inconsistent with inclusive dem
he was elected democratically. he governed exclusively. president obama. >> rose: constitutionally. >> no, exclusively. >> rose: i was asking. >> he actually -- have a constitution. and then he developed one only among islamists. >> rose: rights. >> well, that left me out. i'm a practice muslim. they left me out. i cond find my identity in that. even president obama who was a foreigner, an american, a foreigner, in his speech, he mentioned that the egyptian...
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Sep 17, 2013
09/13
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how do you see the american economy and the leadership of president obama and the fed chairman bernie madoff and others? >> well. >> bernanke? >> and the really big story in america and i thought this at least for a year since coming around for election time is that the american economy is recovering, it is not a really strong traditional recovery but it is getting better, and house prices are recovering, and, therefore -- >> rose: kind of leading it? >> indeed and construction. and you have to say that ben bernanke must take extraordinary credit for the bold, unconventional moves that he made after the collapse of lehman brothers and that the president also should take some credit for the stimulus package that he introduced with the support of congress in early 2009. and that match of monetary and fiscal policy has done its medicine. >> rose: and then have to the question, we are five years after the lehman clams could it happen again, not lehman but some other financial house, another collapse. >> well the big story, the financial institutions many of them are bigger than when we we
how do you see the american economy and the leadership of president obama and the fed chairman bernie madoff and others? >> well. >> bernanke? >> and the really big story in america and i thought this at least for a year since coming around for election time is that the american economy is recovering, it is not a really strong traditional recovery but it is getting better, and house prices are recovering, and, therefore -- >> rose: kind of leading it? >> indeed and...
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Mar 13, 2013
03/13
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. >> rose: do you think, do europeans admire president obama? >> yes. >> rose: because? >> well, because it shows a symbol of change and novelty. of course they love, they were more in love with the first election than with the second. but still because it's always happening politics. but still more of them another case, you know. there's some sort of familiarity, you know. despite we cannot say -- were the most let's say american president the most interested in europe because it was no, it was far away from europe you know. but he didn't studied in europe, he was not -- >> rose: he spent his time in asia. >> but he's left. >> rose: you're an economist and you come from that issue rather than foreign policy. but you were at the european commission. what does the world do about syria and a war that seems to be becoming almost like lebanon. >> well, now there's agreement between russia and security council, chinese -- and so i don't think that -- can be made. i am testing this thinking that let us consider war now. we go on still for a while. >> rose: for a while. >> yes.
. >> rose: do you think, do europeans admire president obama? >> yes. >> rose: because? >> well, because it shows a symbol of change and novelty. of course they love, they were more in love with the first election than with the second. but still because it's always happening politics. but still more of them another case, you know. there's some sort of familiarity, you know. despite we cannot say -- were the most let's say american president the most interested in europe...
WHUT (Howard University Television)
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Oct 11, 2013
10/13
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WHUT
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for my money, this president's second term is going to rise and fall on what happens in the midterm election next year. if the republican brand is so damaged that democrats can overcommagerry manering, find a way to take back the house, keep the senate, and if that's the case, president obama will have a final two year period or at least the final year and a half to maybe get immigration done, perhaps climate change and perhaps guns. >> rose: that's what he's hoping for, a strong win in the 2014 elections. >> absolutely. look at the calendar. very soon here we're going to be at the first of the year and as you guys know it's tough to get anything done on the hill in not election years let alone election years. >> jonathan, just a couple weeks ago you and i would have said it was impossible for democrats to take the house. where are you on that now? >> i think their prospects have definitely gotten better given the republican for global brand. i think it's still an uphill fight for democrats because of how those are drawn but i think it looks better now than a month ago. >> rose: let me final
for my money, this president's second term is going to rise and fall on what happens in the midterm election next year. if the republican brand is so damaged that democrats can overcommagerry manering, find a way to take back the house, keep the senate, and if that's the case, president obama will have a final two year period or at least the final year and a half to maybe get immigration done, perhaps climate change and perhaps guns. >> rose: that's what he's hoping for, a strong win in...
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Dec 24, 2013
12/13
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BLOOMBERG
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those sanctions led in a direct line to the election of rouhani this past spring, to the negotiations and his outreach, and to where we are now. pressure on the economic front has been immense. >> the criticism is that the pressure that resulted on the iranians coming to the table -- if that is true, why let up on the pressure? >> the purpose of the sanctions was not sanctions for the sake of sanctions. it was to make clear to the people and the iranian leadership that the only way forward from immense pressure, which continues during the negotiations -- they get $6 billion to $7 billion relief, but the pressure continues. just last week, the united states put on additional sanctions. >> leading the iranian foreign minister say we may walk on this. the next day. >> my judgment is -- deeply involved with the sanctions effort -- the pressure is on iranians in several respects. economic pressure continues during the course of the negotiations, so they cannot just stall these negotiations and expect to get out from under pressure. it continues at a high level. we did additional last week.
those sanctions led in a direct line to the election of rouhani this past spring, to the negotiations and his outreach, and to where we are now. pressure on the economic front has been immense. >> the criticism is that the pressure that resulted on the iranians coming to the table -- if that is true, why let up on the pressure? >> the purpose of the sanctions was not sanctions for the sake of sanctions. it was to make clear to the people and the iranian leadership that the only way...
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May 2, 2013
05/13
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WMPT
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. >> rose: what do you think of president obama? >> well, i think he is doing a pretty good job, look, he won -- that election campaign that he fought, brilliant, the ground campaign, he has got now a lean second term, he has one of two very difficult foreign policy issues that are going to loom in the second term, iran, particularly iran, that is off the radar at the moment. i would like to see, you know, can president obama with the congress strike a budget deal this year? that's a big test. >> rose: what is interesting there my vantage point is, you know, we know him so far, you know, and he clearly has been a practical man and a political man, and that seems to be his internal shaping compass, yet at the same time he is a student of history and whether there is some boldness in him at some point is released the problem is it redundance up against what is the beginning of 2016 campaign about a year or so from now after the midterm election. >> charlie, do you know what he actually stands for in the second term? i mean. >> rose: w
. >> rose: what do you think of president obama? >> well, i think he is doing a pretty good job, look, he won -- that election campaign that he fought, brilliant, the ground campaign, he has got now a lean second term, he has one of two very difficult foreign policy issues that are going to loom in the second term, iran, particularly iran, that is off the radar at the moment. i would like to see, you know, can president obama with the congress strike a budget deal this year? that's...